Second Sunday after the Epiphany ( John 2:1-11﻿)

Bethlehem Lutheran &
Bethel Lutheran Church, Lebanon & Sweet Home, OR

Second Sunday after the
Epiphany + January 20, 2019

Text: John 2:1-11

When Moses was leading
Israel through the wilderness toward the land of promise, he was content to
know that the Lord went with them. But
more than a stranger on the bus, Moses knew that He wanted to know the Lord’s
ways and find favor in His sight. And
God responded in kind: “My presence will
go with you, and I will give you rest.”
But even with the Lord’s promise to go with him, the knowing His ways,
the promise, “I know you by name,”
Moses longed for more. He said to the
Lord, “Show me your glory.”

But this request, the
Lord was not going to fulfill. It wasn’t
the right time. For all the closeness
that Moses had, seeing God face to face, being known by Him, even having his
face glow from being in the Lord’s presence—it wasn’t time to see His glory,
because “You cannot see my face, for man
shall not see me and live.” (Exodus 32:20)

Around fifteen hundred
years later, God is still with His people, but in a new way—a deeper way. “The
Law was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ.”
(John 1:17)

On the third day
there was a wedding at Cana in Galilee, and the mother of Jesus was there. 2 Jesus
also was invited to the wedding with his disciples. 3 When the
wine ran out, the mother of Jesus said to him, “They have no wine.” 4 And
Jesus said to her, “Woman, what does this have to do with me? My hour has not
yet come.” 5 His mother said to the servants, “Do whatever he
tells you.”

Building on the
closeness that Moses knew, the Lord indeed is going with His people, He has
made known His ways through Moses and the Law, and He is indeed personally
present. Again, there is a request: “They have no wine.” But the response isn’t simply, “That’s not my
concern”; it’s “My hour has not yet
come.” The answer is, not yet. But even as Moses was given a glimpse of the
glory of the Lord from the cleft of the rock, the Lord begins to reveal Himself
to His people.

If we get caught up in
how Jesus did this, or how much wine, or what quality it is, we miss the
greatest thing: This sign is about God revealing Himself in a greater and new
way to His people, a way that was not possible in times past. “This,
the first of His signs, Jesus did at Cana in Galilee, and manifested His glory.
And His disciples believed in Him.”
The Lord was unveiling His glory to His chosen people.

What is His glory? Certainly there’s the technical answers about
a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night, how Moses could not
enter the tabernacle because God’s glory had entered it. But it’s easier to describe than that. God’s glory is the unmediated intimacy which
He has with man. This has not been seen
on earth since the Fall—ever since then it has been as the hymn says, “Though
the eye of sinful man, Thy glory may not see.”
God’s glory has been held back, concealed, clothed. Just as Adam and Eve could no longer be naked
without shame, so God and man could not dwell together in perfect and shameless
nakedness. The union was broken with
sin.

St. Paul speaks of this
union which God desires with man in terms of marriage:

23 Christ
is the head of the church, his body, and is himself its Savior…Christ loved the
church and gave himself up for her, 26 that he might sanctify
her, having cleansed her by the washing of water with the word, 27 so
that he might present the church to himself in splendor, without spot or
wrinkle or any such thing, that she might be holy and without blemish… Christ nourishes
and cherishes the church, 30 because we are members of his body…Therefore
a man shall leave his father and mother and hold fast to his wife, and the two
shall become one flesh.

He concludes by saying,
“This mystery is profound, and I am
saying that it refers to Christ and the Church.” (v. 32) You could say that marriage is an analogy for
God’s quest to restore that intimacy with man that was lost in Eden. And just like the closeness and intimacy of husband
and wife, it unfolds over time.

The revelation of God’s
glory is akin to man and woman and the road to becoming husband and wife. Two people meet, and there’s chemistry, but
they’re unsure, gradually getting to know one another. Trust is developed over time and through experience.
Infatuation strengthens into genuine love, self-sacrifice and putting the needs
of the other above your own interests.
Then there’s the mutual agreement that this is the person that you want
to spend the rest of your life with. And
upon being married, declared husband and wife before the community, leaving
father and mother and holding fast to each other, that the point of consummation
is reached. Husband and wife become one
flesh—bonded together physically, emotionally, and materially. “What
God has brought together, let no man rent asunder.” (Mark 10:9).

And what God has
brought together begets children for husband and wife—now father and mother—to
nurture together. This is the order
which God established, an earthly reflection of a heavenly reality, the union
of man and woman as a parable of the salvation of the world.

But tragically, we
human beings have turned over that order and the consequences are
palpable. Today, many Christian churches
in America are commemorating Sanctity of Life Sunday, but this isn’t just a
problem of abortion. That’s only a
symptom. There is a culture of casting
every tradition aside and fulfilling one’s passions that’s akin to desiring to
see God’s glory before it’s the right time to be revealed. We seek the glory of marriage before the
right time and without the burden it involves.
Closeness is sought up front without the time and mutual trust which
must come first, and it results in deep secrets being turned into weapons of
revenge. The expectation of sexual
intimacy and pleasure are seen as the next step for dating couples, without the
duty and commitment that undergird it. That
union is further divided when one turns that mutual enjoyment inward and substitutes
an image on a screen. Couples want to be
one life and property, but without the legal obligations from the state which
support and enforce that.

Led by hormones and a flippancy
toward tradition, it’s actually the next generation that suffers. This is where
abortion often shows up, as a desire to eliminate babies from the one flesh
union. Here, the CDC reports that 85.7%
of abortions are by unmarried mothers—those who don’t have the stability of a
committed husband who does the godly thing and raises the child he has brought
into existence.[1]

But God did not jump
the gun on His married intimacy with His Bride, the Church. He revealed His glory when the fullness of
time had come, God sent forth His Son, born of woman, born under the Law to
redeem those under the Law.

How much we need God to
bring us back to that intimacy we had with Him at the beginning! And that is His burning desire! God so often compares Himself to a husband
longing to retrieve His wayward wife, because we are the ones who left
Him. We are the ones who left Him and
made a mess of our lives and the lives of others. In spite of our unfaithfulness, Christ, our
husband, calls us back to Himself. Even while
we were delighting in immorality, Christ was dying for us. While we were playing fancy free with His
order, He was tirelessly seeking our place in His new creation.

At Cana in Galilee,
Christ began to reveal His glory, “glory
as of the only-begotten Son from the Father, full of grace and truth.” That was just the start! His glory was most fully revealed to us (so
far) when He was lifted up on the cross to take away the sin of the world[2]—to
take away your sin and mine. That’s
where God, your husband, not only revealed His heart, but also showed exactly
what He was willing to do to win you back and restore that perfect intimacy.

And still, we have not
seen all of His glory, but only as much as we are allowed to see now. We have His Word, we have seen and believed
in His Son, lifted up on the cross. The light to lighten the Gentiles and the
glory of His people Israel—is that He came in the flesh to redeem us. Yet even still, our Bridegroom is with His
Bride. He hasn’t abandoned us or
forsaken us while we wander through the wilderness. To Moses, He said, “My presence will go with you, and I will give you rest.” (Exodus
32:14) That was true enough then, but
even more so now, because now our Bridegroom baptizes us into His death and
resurrection. He gives of us His Body
and Blood to eat and drink. He has made
Himself one flesh with us, and we with Him.

So this day in time, as
He comes to us with His Body and Blood, I want you to focus on the 2nd
stanza of the hymn, “Soul, Adorn Yourself with Gladness.” (LSB 636). Stanza 2 expresses our longing for our
heavenly Bridegroom: